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#9148
cameraclicker
Participant

The better your camera work is, the less you have to do in Photoshop, and generally “less is more” is a good philosophy.  Joel Grimes is into shooting the model in a studio and adding a background shot on location.  He desaturates a lot and adds lights in Photoshop.  It is a very distinctive look.  He has done it a lot so he is pretty fast.  Joe McNally gets it all done in camera and gives it to a retoucher who does very little to get the final image.  Both famous photographers, totally different styles, totally different looks.

200 shots an hour is just over 3 shots a minute, or a shot every 20 seconds.  That’s a lot.  That said, this “portrait” was shot over 6 minutes and 69 photos or just under 12 a minute…  Of course my “model” does not take direction very well and is inclined to get up and leave without notice.

This is the first frame

FirstFrameFly

This is the 47th frame, creeping closer for each frame.  These are all hand held macro with a 100 mm lens.

Frame47Fly

By frame 59, I had a new angle but I was further away again…  Further away is backing up 6 or 7 inches.

Frame59Fly

That frame, straightened and cropped looks like this

Frame59Fly_crop

After 6 minutes, 2 seconds, and 69 frames my “model” left.  My next “model” was a wasp that appeared a couple of minutes later, followed by a bumble bee a few minutes after that…

OK, seriously, it depends on what you are shooting.  If you are shooting sports, everyone around you is using high speed drive and when something is happening you can’t hear yourself think for the sound of mirrors and shutters moving.  If you are in a studio with a single model, you probably have drive set to single shot because most studio lamps won’t have recovered in time to take a second shot even on low speed drive.  And, you can shoot at a leisurely rate because your model is probably not going to jump up and run out the door in the middle of your shoot.  You get your model into the pose you want, say something to get the reaction you desire and release the shutter.  Then you set up for the next shot by repeating those steps.  A frame every minute or two is probably more than adequate and still pretty fast.  I went back and looked at one of my shoots.  Two couples with clothing changes and background changes and a group shot of the four of them took an hour and thirty-five minutes, which resulted in 32 frames.  If your models don’t blink at the wrong moment, you can get by with very few shots and no repeats.  If they are blinkers, you might need a few more shots.  At the start of this, I mentioned Joe McNally.  He shot James Brown in a hotel lobby in (I think it was) Atlanta, shortly before James Brown died.  McNally cleared out the furniture from the area he was going to shoot in before James Brown arrived.  When he arrived they had a friendly discussion and McNally started shooting.  He only got a dozen frames or so before James Brown had had enough and called it a day.   So get the shot as soon as you can in case you have to move on.